Manners are everything.
Yesterday, I read the most obnoxious piece of Recruiting propaganda that I've ever seen. I've been wading through crap for many years. This particular nugget is in a category of its own.
Here's the offensive nonsense:
What do you do if a candidate starts asking questions?If you answer politely, you may find that there are follow-up questions and follow-ups to that…and the questions will get increasingly difficult to answer. Before you know it, you are asked a particularly tough question, and there is that sinking feeling once again.
The typical advice is to answer, and take the reins back by asking a question, but that can be problematic. What if the candidate doesn’t give you the chance?
Some won’t. They are professionals and they have questions that they want to have answered, and they’re going to get to all those questions. They also are testing you. They are sparring, but you as a recruiter are at a great disadvantage. They have domain knowledge; you don’t. As soon as you get into that sparring contest, prepare to lose.
Don’t allow the frontal assault. Don’t allow them to take control. Keep them where you need them and keep the focus on them. You are the recruiter and you are the one who asks the questions. They are the one being tested, not you. You already have a job and they are the ones who need to prove themselves to you.(ERE)
Compare that with Wozniak's recounting of the way Steve Jobs persuaded him to come to...:
His life's dream was to work for Hewlett-Packard for life, and he got his start with a job before graduating from the University of California, Berkeley. "I got a job a Hewlett-Packard designing handheld calculators. I was very lucky. Because I could design, they interviewed and hired me. But I didn't have a degree," he said.He offered his computer designs to HP five times, but they never were interested. "I would not sell something for money without my employer getting a cut of it."
"I was never going to leave HP for life. That's where I wanted to be forever," but Apple co-founder Steve Jobs launched a campaign that eventually persuaded Wozniak to strike off on his own. "Steve Jobs got all my friends and relatives to call me."(CNET)
There's a question here.
Is recruiting a manipulative sport where human beings are precisely "Capital"? Is the approach I'm criticizing actually right?
or
Is Recruiting a graceful endeavor where team building and consequence matter?
I'm eager to get your perspective.
For me, this approach smacks of old school, high leverage used car sales tactics. It's very useful if you've got bad merchandise you are trying to unload. It's disastrous if you are trying to build an employment brand to attract A-list players. Strong arm tactics have no place in our business.
Tags:
Recruiters like that are the ones that cast a black cloud over the whole industry. A good recruiter has domain knowledge and can demonstrate that to a candidate and not only can answer questions, but welcomes them. The more questions the candidate asks, the more opportunity you have as a recruiter to gather information that will lead to the right job for that candidate. If you do it well, you never have to 'close' a candidate, they close themselves because you will present them with a role that maps up with what they're looking for.
And of course you won't always have all the answers, but when you don't you go and find out and in the process you learn even more about the industry and role.
End result is a great placement, ideally a long term career for the candidate who will then refer other great candidates to you because of your results, and better yet, that candidate will hopefully one day be a hiring manager and will call you to assist.
The tone of the article gives you every right to call the author out, but there are times that as a recruiter you have to take the reins for candidates.
It's risky, but some people like to be told what to do. A great recruiter will serve that role, but only when necessary. It's sensitive when you're working with someone on a big decision like switching jobs, and it's something that ultimately we can't make a decision on, but there have been times when I've had to handhold candidates in a way that would strike an outsider as manipulative.
My struggle at that time was determining how much responsibility I was willing to take if it didn't work out, and considering how little control I had after a client start, that's a tougher burden.
The tone of the article gives you every right to call the author out, but there are times that as a recruiter you have to take the reins for candidates.
It's risky, but some people like to be told what to do. A great recruiter will serve that role, but only when necessary. It's sensitive when you're working with someone on a big decision like switching jobs, and it's something that ultimately we can't make a decision on, but there have been times when I've had to handhold candidates in a way that would strike an outsider as manipulative.
My struggle at that time was determining how much responsibility I was willing to take if it didn't work out, and considering how little control I had after a client start, that's a tougher burden.
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